5 reasons internal communities are essential for your business

Today the word community does not hold the stigma it once did. On the contrary, internal communities are associated with notions such as helping each other and stand as a counterweight to the individualism and also alienation and solitude of the modern era.

In the business world, companies try to promote and nurture their customer and user communities primarily in order to drive their business growth through referrals and recommendations of satisfied customers.

But what about internal communities, that is communities of employees? What is their value and how can this value be enhanced? Below is our list of business benefits of internal communities.

Natural support system

Internal communities are places where employees can find help and support when they experience difficulties. I personally experienced such a community first hand several times, when joining a company among other newcomers. Often, when I had a question about the HR process or an Excel function, for example, it was easier to ask a peer that I met in the onboarding events rather than to ask HR or my boss.

Besides, a big part of the company knowledge is “silent”. That knowledge is in the heads of the various experts as opposed to being consigned and expressed somewhere. Communities are a great way to capture and share that knowledge through conversations.

Most companies rely on org charts and hierarchies. As a consequence, employees are placed in boxes where they interact with a limited number of people, mostly related to their own field of expertise. Internal communities allow to escape this structure and form cross-department groups where employees from different backgrounds can come together and interact. Great ideas are often born in just such a type of interaction and mingling.

Also, being a place without hierarchy and judgement, a community is a place where ideas can be expressed freely and debated without fear.

Employee satisfaction

Social interaction and recognition score highly on the Maslow pyramid of human needs and its employee needs equivalent. Internal communities are a great way to address that need, as employees can interact with peers with common interests and be valued for their skills or input in a friendly setting outside of the company hierarchical structure.

Moreover, as traditional communities are disappearing, people rely more and more on virtual communities to supplement their need to belong. And workplaces’ ability to provide such communities contributes to higher employee satisfaction levels.

Saving money and making money

Obviously, the above benefits sound nice; but they also have a very real financial impact. As employees get help and information, they spend less time searching for it, hence spend more time working and producing value. Internal communities save on onboarding and training cost and talent-development cost. The cost of innovation and especially the loss of opportunity linked to a lacking innovation can in the long run make the difference between a top performer and a dying business. And, of course, satisfied employees mean less turnover.

So now that you are hopefully convinced of the value of internal communities, what can your company do to help them? We’ll list some ideas in a future post.

I am eXo’s chief operating officer, ultimately responsible for all operations ensuring client acquisition and success.
In this blog, I write about modern workplaces and their benefits to organisations and their people. Occasionally, I also blog about my personal areas of interest, such as communication, personal development, work–life balance, sustainability and gender equality.